Description:
What would you do if you were given a second chance? Annabelle, whom nearly everyone calls Anne, has been stuck in the past for two years. Numbed by grief over her husband's unexpected death and overwhelmed with the responsibility of raising their three young children alone, Anne agrees to let a friend take the kids for the weekend while she tries to get some much-needed rest at her parent's home. But when Anne wakes up the next morning, she is suddenly sixteen again. And it just happens to be the worst day she spent as a teenager. High school the second time around brings unforeseen changes and frustrations, but remembering that her future husband, Mitch, has just returned from a mission and is living on the other side of town gives Anne hope. Getting Mitch's attention (for the second time) is more complicated than she could have imagined, but Anne discovers she is stronger than she believed possible—and there just might be a future for her after all.
Excerpt:
What would you do if you were given a second chance? Annabelle, whom nearly everyone calls Anne, has been stuck in the past for two years. Numbed by grief over her husband's unexpected death and overwhelmed with the responsibility of raising their three young children alone, Anne agrees to let a friend take the kids for the weekend while she tries to get some much-needed rest at her parent's home. But when Anne wakes up the next morning, she is suddenly sixteen again. And it just happens to be the worst day she spent as a teenager. High school the second time around brings unforeseen changes and frustrations, but remembering that her future husband, Mitch, has just returned from a mission and is living on the other side of town gives Anne hope. Getting Mitch's attention (for the second time) is more complicated than she could have imagined, but Anne discovers she is stronger than she believed possible—and there just might be a future for her after all.
Excerpt:
He led me
into Mr. Allan’s office, a place where we all frequently hung out. There were a
couple of other kids in there on a couch in the corner, sophomores just digging
their lunches out of their backpacks, but Sam, with the power of his senior
status, just pointed to the door and they scrambled to their feet and out the
door. He closed it softly behind us. I was completely intimidated.
I’m
thirty-eight years old. I have three kids and a mortgage and a dead husband
whom I miss more than I can possibly express. I am not intimidated by a
seventeen-year-old kid I’m never going to see after I get married, I thought.
“I’m
actually eighteen. Last week,” Sam said as he passed me to sit down on the
couch.
My jaw
dropped open. Had I actually said that out loud? Did it really matter? This was
a dream. I was more sure of that fact than I had been before. This was the most
dreamlike part of my day so far. I stared at him, allowing myself to drink in
the sight of his broad chest and deep brown eyes while I considered my options.
Okay, I
thought, careful to keep silent this time, if this is a dream, then it must be
my subconscious trying to tell me something or work through an unresolved
problem. I thought about the conversation with my mother in the car. I had told
her how sorry I was for hurting her, something I hadn’t done in reality, and it
had felt really good. Now I was faced with another opportunity to right a
wrong. This must be what my dream was for. Making the connection took a lot of
weight off my mind. I knew what I had to do. I followed Sam, feeling a little
more confident, and sat down on the opposite end of the couch, as far away as
the cushions would permit.
“Look, Sam,
I owe you an apology. We were friends . . . sort of . . . and you always knew
that I had a huge crush on you, practically since I was twelve. There’s no way
you couldn’t know it. I mean, could I have been more obvious?” I laughed, a
short sarcastic sound, and then cleared my throat to continue.
“It was just
a teenage crush, though. Still, I know that it had to be pretty disturbing to
have some girl threatening to kill herself and laying the responsibility on
you. That wasn’t fair, and I don’t know what I was thinking. I guess we could
chalk it up to immaturity and a desperate plea for attention.”
This was
horrible. Had I thought I could explain this in a way that would make sense? I
soldiered on, just needing to be done with it.
“Really,
though, it’s not your fault, and I was never in danger of actually committing
suicide. In fact, I have lived a very happy life without you, and I wish the
same for you. You are a very nice boy, and I’m sure you are going to have great
success in the Air Force and meet someone great and have some kids, and that
will be that. So please don’t worry about me. I’m just fine. I won’t chase
after you or write you letters or drive by your house on the way home from the
store or call and hang up when you answer or any of that other bizarre teenage
girl behavior anymore. You have my word.”
That should
do it. I had closure now, right? I was ready to wake up. I closed my eyes and
tried to picture myself waking up on The Rack in my thirty-eight-year-old body,
complete with lines on my face and a few stray gray hairs that I had missed in
my last hunt-and-pluck session.
The room was
completely quiet. I opened my eyes, and Sam was staring at me with a half grin
on his face.
Author Emily Gray Clawson
Emily Gray Clawson describes herself as an author, mother, and youth mentor. Born and raised in Utah, she is passionate about her faith and great books and will share her love of both with anyone who will listen. Emily began writing at the age of seven, creating homemade picture books that she peddled from door to door. She self-published her first novel, Things Hope For, and is collaborating with Jennifer Graves on a book entitled A Sister’s Witness: The Powell Family Tragedy. With her husband, Richard, Emily founded two youth leadership programs, Handmaidens of Virtue and Mastering Knighthood. Trained in vocal performance in college, she has enjoyed including aspects of her training in this book. Emily and Richard are the parents of four children and live in Taylorsville, Utah.
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2 comments:
Mica descriere atașata m-a făcut să-mi doresc cartea, e pe gustul meu, seamănă într-un fel sau altul cu „ 13 going to 30 ” , e aceeași ideea și-mi place :) .
Frumos . Felicitari pentru tot ce faceti !
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